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Recipe 5.2 Finding Types of IP Routes

5.2.1 Problem

You want to look for a particular type of route in your router's routing tables.

5.2.2 Solution

Often you are more interested in finding all of the directly connected networks, or all of the static routes, rather than a specific route. This can be done easily by specifying the type of route in the show command:

Router>show ip route connected
     192.168.17.0/27 is subnetted, 1 subnets
C       192.168.17.0 is directly connected, Loopback1
     172.16.0.0/30 is subnetted, 1 subnets
C       172.16.1.0 is directly connected, Async1
     172.25.0.0/16 is variably subnetted, 6 subnets, 3 masks
C       172.25.25.0/30 is directly connected, Tunnel0
C       172.25.1.0/24 is directly connected, Ethernet0
C       172.25.9.0/24 is directly connected, Ethernet1
C       172.25.10.1/32 is directly connected, Loopback0
   
Router>show ip route static
     192.168.1.0/32 is subnetted, 1 subnets
S       192.168.1.1 [1/0] via 172.25.1.4

Another useful variant of the show ip route command summarizes all of the different types of routes in the table:

Router>show ip route summary
IP routing table name is Default-IP-Routing-Table(0)
Route Source    Networks    Subnets     Overhead    Memory (bytes)
connected       0           3           328         432
static          1           0           64          144
ospf 55         1           3           256         576
  Intra-area: 1 Inter-area: 2 External-1: 1 External-2: 0
  NSSA External-1: 0 NSSA External-2: 0
internal        2                                   2328
Total           4           6           648         3480

5.2.3 Discussion

You can see the full list of possibilities by using a question mark (?) on the command line:

Router>show ip route ?
Hostname or A.B.C.D  Network to display information about or hostname
  bgp                  Border Gateway Protocol (BGP)
  connected            Connected
  egp                  Exterior Gateway Protocol (EGP)
  eigrp                Enhanced Interior Gateway Routing Protocol (EIGRP)
  igrp                 Interior Gateway Routing Protocol (IGRP)
  isis                 ISO IS-IS
  list                 IP Access list
  odr                  On Demand stub Routes
  ospf                 Open Shortest Path First (OSPF)
  profile              IP routing table profile
  rip                  Routing Information Protocol (RIP)
  static               Static routes
  summary              Summary of all routes
  supernets-only       Show supernet entries only
  traffic-engineering  Traffic engineered routes
  <cr>

This is useful when you want to see all of the routes that the router has learned via a particular routing protocol, or all of the statically configured or directly connected routes. The output format with the different type keywords is exactly the same as for the general show ip route, but it presents only the routes of the required type.

The show ip route summary command gives useful information about the size of the routing table and how much memory the router has allocated to storing this information, conveniently broken down by routing protocol. The example also shows how many routes belong to each of the different OSPF area types.

This command has several uses. First, it gives you a convenient way to estimate your routing table's memory requirements. In this case, the routing table is very small, so more memory is used to store connected routes than OSPF routes. However, in a larger network you will often want to know if one routing protocol is causing memory problems for your routers. This can help you decide if you need route filtering or summarization mechanisms. Routers exchanging BGP routing information with the public Internet can have particularly serious memory utilization problems.

Second, because it shows how many routes are learned by each mechanism, you can easily check the stability of the routing table by seeing whether this number changes in time. If you look at the entire routing table you may not notice that a handful of routes periodically disappear and reappear, but looking at this summary information makes it much easier to spot such problems.

Third, you can easily see whether your routing table is getting its information the way you expect. It can be a very quick and easy way to check if the router is installing floating static routes or external routes in its routing table.


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